Party Competition in Illinois: Republican Prospects in a Blue State Introduction Campaigns and elections in Illinois are always interesting and exciting spectacles. They are full of colorful characters, great plots, and unexpected twists to the story line. Each election brings new characters and different stories, but each builds on the rich tradition and culture of a big and diverse state which takes its politics and politicians quite seriously. A state which over the last half century has produced such notables as Everett Dirksen, Paul Douglas, Adlai Stevenson, Jr., Charles Percy, Paul Simon, Alan Dixon, Richard Ogilvie, Dan Walker, Dan Rostenkowski, Richard J. Daley, Harold Washington, Richard M. Daley, Russell Arrington, Phil Rock, Michael Madigan, Pate Phillip, Roland Burris, George Ryan, Jim Edgar, Jim Thompson, Richard Durbin, Barack Obama, Emil Jones, Judy Barr Topinka, and Rod Blagojevich clearly has a great political culture and a compelling political history. We have had our scoundrels and some have ended up in federal prison. We have had our statesmen of the past and some of our present leaders hold national office with great prominence and prospects for national leadership. One of the reasons Illinois politics and government is always so interesting is the fact that the two parties, at least over the long term, have faced each other from a fairly even statewide base. Each party has experienced the ups and downs that go with the electoral tides of the moment, and each has been dominant and each disadvantaged for some period of time. Illinois has been a competitive state for decades; however, from the 1940s through the 1980s the Republicans held a consistent advantage if one judges by control of the majority in the General Assembly. Also, from 1976 through 2002 the Republicans won every race for Governor and controlled the executive mansion for 26 consecutive years. After the 2002 state elections the Democrats took control of the entire government, riding a tide of electoral success which swept the governor’s race and all the constitutional offices, except for the State Treasurer. Just as importantly, the Democrats for the first time since 1992 took control of the majority in both the Illinois House and the Illinois Senate. This was the first time since the brief two year interval of 1975‐ 1976, when Dan Walker was governor, that the Democrats had control of both the executive and the legislative branches or had a unified government under their control. Before that brief interlude, one had to go back to the New Deal Era of 1933 through 1940, when Henry Horner was Governor for almost two terms, to find another comparable lengthy era of unified 1 government under the Democrats (Howard, 1999, 239‐246). After the 2002 Democratic sweep, there was much political commentary about how the Republicans were facing hard times in Illinois and entering a rebuilding era. Then in 2006 the plight of the Republicans got even worse. That year, Governor Rod Blagojevich was handily re‐elected over the Republican State Treasurer, Judy Barr Topinka. The Democrats held onto their majority in the Illinois House and increased their majority in the Illinois State Senate. The Democrats also swept all the state constitutional office races, including the State Treasurer, which prior to 2006 had been the only statewide office still held by the Republicans. The Democrats had owned both U. S. Senate seats since 2004 when Democrat Barack Obama replaced former Senator Peter Fitzgerald. In fact, Obama won that race in a landslide against the hapless Alan Keyes who the Republicans had imported from Maryland to run against Obama at the last minute (Jackson, 2006). It was only at the level of the U. S. House results for 2006 that the Republicans could take any real solace. There their former 10 to 9 advantage in House seats had been reversed in 2004 when veteran Republican Phil Crane had been upset by Melissa Bean. The Democrats maintained that 10 to 9 advantage after the 2006 elections. This very closely divided and narrow majority enjoyed by the Democrats statewide in the U. S. House distribution contains an important lesson. The overall competitiveness of the two parties statewide is indicated by these geographically based results and it extends beyond the usual redistricting truth that the map is often drawn to protect incumbents first and the party in power second. Republicans have been competitive, and at times even dominant statewide in the past, and there are some indicators in this paper as to how and where they can regain their competitiveness in the future. Lessons from Voting Behavior Research Most of the empirical evidence provided in this paper will focus on aggregate data assembled at the county and statewide level. It is useful to start this analysis with explicit recognition that all aggregate voting returns are made up of individual voters and the discipline of Political Science has developed an extensive base of knowledge about how those individuals behave politically. One of the cardinal rules of voting behavior is that partisanship counts for a lot and is very important in explaining why elections turn out as they do. Voters come in a variety of partisan forms ranging from strong partisans to weak partisans to independents. The strong partisans vote routinely and very heavily for their own party’s nominees up and down the ticket. The only question about them is whether they will be motivated by the candidates, the issues, and the campaigns to turn out to vote in a particular election, and usually they do so at rates much higher than the weak partisans and the independents. Very few strong partisans defect to the other party in any one election although they may stay home if there is something particularly egregious about the party’s ticket or its recent record. The weak partisans are not nearly as loyal and they have a much greater propensity to split their tickets and to defect to the other party. They are also harder to motivate and to persuade to turn out on election day. 2 The weak partisans must be motivated and mobilized in order to help contribute to building the party’s electoral coalition into a winning majority. The strong and weak partisans together can drive the building toward an electoral majority; however, neither major party is strong enough in Illinois, or nationally, to depend entirely on their own partisans to win a majority in most elections. Only at the local level, in some one party dominant geographic jurisdictions can one build an electoral majority out of only the party’s own strong partisans. It is clear that on the crucial variable of party identification the Democrats have enjoyed an advantage statewide recently. Public opinion polls have consistently showed that the Democrats lead the Republicans by a comfortable margin in Illinois. For example, a Survey U S A poll conducted in July of 2006 showed the Democrats at 43 percent, the Republicans at 32 percent, and the Independents at 23 percent in Illinois (Reported in Miller, Capital Fax, July 28, 2006). Two months later, in September, a Chicago Tribune poll found the Democrats at 43 percent; the Republicans at 25 percent, and the Independents at 22 percent (Chicago Tribune, September 12, 2006). These results indicate that from two‐thirds to three fourths of Illinois voters identify with one of the two major parties which is a rate of partisanship somewhat higher than the national averages and which is another indicator of a very partisan and a very competitive state although it is one with a Democratic advantage at this point. For comparison a Gallup poll taken in late January of 2007 showed that the national distribution of partisans was 34 percent Democrats, 30 percent Republicans, and 34 percent Independents (Gallup, 2007). This analysis also identifies a third and sizable group of voters who are not strong or weak party supporters and who can be appealed to on the basis of the issues and the candidates presented in a particular race. These are the Independents who reject party labels and party loyalty for whatever combination of reasons. They tend to split their tickets more and they are up for grabs as they swing back and forth in the party and candidates they support from election to election. Actually the empirical research shows that there are two basic types of Independents. One group is the true Independents, i.e. those who have absolutely no allegiance to either major party and no sense of attachment to either and who actively reject such attachments. They may truly “vote the person and not the party” as the popular phrase goes. Other independents may overtly reject taking the party label for themselves and may not psychologically identify with either party; however, in a behavioral sense they predominantly support one party over the other. These are what the scholars call “independent‐leaners” who rather consistently support one party over the other while rejecting the party label (Keith, et al., 1992) As Keith and his associates showed in their research, this variant of the Independents acts in the voting booth much like the weak partisans of the party they lean toward. They are harder to turn out at the polls and they are more disengaged in politics than the strong partisans; however, when they vote, they are likely to be pretty consistent supporters of one 3 party. This leaves a much smaller group of “true Independents” as the most likely to split their tickets and to change their partisan vote from election to election, or to not vote at all, or to be attracted to third party candidates.
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